Updated March 2026 · 11 min read

How to get a mortgage as a self-employed person (2026)

Getting a mortgage when you're self-employed is harder — not because lenders won't lend to you, but because they calculate your income completely differently than they do for W-2 employees. A salaried worker shows a pay stub. You show two years of tax returns, and the lender uses the lower of the two years, after deductions. That means every tax deduction that saved you money on April 15 now works against you at the lender's desk. Here's how the process actually works and what you can do about it.

Why it's harder (the deduction paradox)

This is the fundamental tension self-employed borrowers face. Your tax returns — the documents lenders use to verify your income — are designed to minimize your taxable income. You claimed every legitimate deduction: mileage, home office, health insurance, retirement contributions, depreciation. That's smart tax planning.

But the lender doesn't care about your gross revenue. They care about your net income on Schedule C, Line 31 — the number after all deductions. A freelancer who grossed $120,000 but reported $55,000 net after deductions will be evaluated as a $55,000/year earner.

This creates a real planning trade-off: aggressive deductions save taxes but reduce your borrowing power. If you know you'll apply for a mortgage in the next 1–2 years, you may need to strategically reduce certain discretionary deductions (especially depreciation and retirement contributions) to show higher net income on your returns. We'll cover this in the strategy section below.

What lenders require from self-employed borrowers

Conventional (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) lenders and most other mortgage programs require the following from self-employed applicants:

RequirementDetails
2 years of tax returnsComplete personal returns (Form 1040) including all schedules. If you file as an S-Corp or partnership, the business return (Form 1120S or 1065) is needed too.
2 years of self-employmentMost lenders require a minimum of 2 years operating the same business. Some will accept 1 year if you have strong compensating factors (high credit score, large down payment, or prior experience in the same field as a W-2 employee).
Year-to-date profit & lossA current P&L statement (often CPA-prepared) showing your income from January 1 of the current year through the most recent month.
Business license or registrationProof the business exists — an EIN letter, state business registration, or DBA filing.
2–3 months of bank statementsBusiness and personal account statements to verify deposits and cash flow.
Credit scoreMinimum 620 for conventional, 580 for FHA. Higher scores get better rates.
Down payment3–5% minimum for conventional, 3.5% for FHA. Self-employed borrowers often benefit from putting 10–20% down to offset risk perception.

How lenders calculate your income

This is where self-employed borrowers get surprised. The lender doesn't just look at last year's Schedule C. They average your net income across two years — and if income declined from year 1 to year 2, many lenders will use the lower year or require an explanation.

Year 1 net profit (Schedule C, Line 31): $72,000
Year 2 net profit (Schedule C, Line 31): $65,000
Average: ($72,000 + $65,000) ÷ 2 = $68,500
Monthly qualifying income: $68,500 ÷ 12 = $5,708/month

That $5,708 monthly income determines your debt-to-income ratio (DTI), which most lenders cap at 43–50%. At 45% DTI and $5,708 monthly income, your total monthly debts (including the new mortgage payment) can't exceed $2,569.

Add-backs: deductions that get added back to your income

There's good news: lenders add certain non-cash deductions back to your net income. The biggest one is depreciation. Because depreciation is a paper expense (you didn't actually spend cash), lenders add it back to your qualifying income. Other common add-backs include amortization, depletion, and certain one-time business losses the lender determines are non-recurring.

For example, if your Schedule C shows $65,000 net profit and $8,000 in depreciation, your qualifying income for mortgage purposes is $73,000 — not $65,000. This is significant.

The deduction trade-off: planning 1–2 years ahead

If you're planning to buy a home in the next 1–2 years, consider these strategic adjustments to your tax returns. None of these are illegal or dishonest — they're simply choices about which legitimate deductions to claim and when.

The math that matters A freelancer who grosses $100,000 and normally shows $58,000 net after deductions qualifies for roughly a $250,000 mortgage (at 7% rate, 30-year term, with no other debts). The same freelancer who reduces discretionary deductions to show $75,000 net qualifies for roughly $325,000. That's a $75,000 difference in purchasing power from the same gross income — just from timing deductions strategically.

Loan types that work best for self-employed borrowers

Loan typeSelf-employed fitKey consideration
Conventional (Fannie/Freddie)Good — standard option2 years tax returns, 620+ credit, 3–5% down minimum
FHAGood for lower credit580+ credit, 3.5% down, 2 years self-employment, higher mortgage insurance
Bank statement loanBest for high-deduction freelancersUses 12–24 months of bank deposits instead of tax returns to determine income. Higher interest rate (typically 1–2% above conventional), usually requires 10–20% down. Available from non-QM lenders.
USDA / VAIf eligible, very competitiveSame 2-year self-employment requirement but 0% down payment possible

The bank statement loan deserves special attention. If your tax returns show low net income because you claim heavy deductions, but your bank deposits show strong gross revenue, a bank statement loan bypasses the tax return problem entirely. The lender looks at 12–24 months of business bank deposits and applies an "expense factor" (typically 50%) to estimate your income. These loans carry higher rates and larger down payment requirements, but they solve the core problem for freelancers whose tax returns don't reflect their actual earning capacity. A clean, well-organized business bank account is essential for this path — see our expense tracking guide for setting that up.

A 12-month mortgage prep timeline for freelancers

  1. 12 months before: Pull your credit reports (annualcreditreport.com — free). Dispute any errors. Pay down credit card balances below 30% utilization. Stop opening new credit accounts.
  2. 12 months before: Adjust your tax deduction strategy for the upcoming return. Reduce discretionary deductions if they'll suppress your qualifying income.
  3. 6 months before: Organize your documentation: 2 full years of tax returns, year-to-date P&L, business license/EIN letter, 3 months of bank statements.
  4. 3 months before: Get pre-approved (not just pre-qualified). Pre-approval involves a full underwriting review with your actual documents. Self-employed pre-approvals take longer — start early.
  5. 3 months before: Ask the loan officer specifically about their self-employed underwriting guidelines. Some lenders are significantly more flexible than others. If one lender is difficult, try a mortgage broker who shops across multiple lenders.
  6. At application: Have your CPA prepare a current-year P&L statement and a letter confirming your business is active and in good standing. This proactively addresses the lender's concern about income continuity.

Common reasons self-employed borrowers get denied — and how to avoid them

Declining income. If year 2 shows lower net income than year 1, lenders get cautious. Some will use only year 2. Others will deny. If your income legitimately fluctuates, be prepared with a written explanation and evidence that the dip was temporary (a lost client who was replaced, a one-time expense, a seasonal pattern).

Mixing business and personal accounts. Lenders want clean financial separation. If your business income flows through a personal checking account, it creates confusion and delays. A dedicated business bank account — even a free one — solves this problem before it starts.

Insufficient documentation. Unlike W-2 borrowers who submit a pay stub and a W-2, self-employed borrowers face extensive documentation requests. Underwriters will ask follow-up questions. Respond quickly and completely — delays kill deals.

New business (under 2 years). If you've been freelancing for less than 2 years, most conventional lenders will decline. Options: wait until you hit the 2-year mark, find a portfolio lender with flexible guidelines, or explore bank statement loans from non-QM lenders.

The most important thing you can do today If homeownership is a goal in the next 1–3 years, open a dedicated business bank account and run all business income through it. This single action makes every step of the mortgage process easier — from documenting income to satisfying underwriter requests to qualifying for bank statement loans. See our recommended business bank accounts.